anthony_costanzo_web.jpgBy ELGIN JONES
EJones@SFLTimes.com

FORT LAUDERDALE — A Broward Sheriff’s Office (BSO) deputy who has been featured on the FOX Network’s reality program COPS has been arrested on witness tampering and other charges.

Deputy Anthony Costanzo was suspended with pay on Jan. 20 and has now been arrested. He is now suspended without pay. He is charged with one count of witness tampering, one count of evidence tampering, one count of destroying evidence and one count of using an electronic device to carrying out his alleged crimes.

As first disclosed in a South Florida Times report, Costanzo was accused of witness tampering related to a case involving the Fort Lauderdale Police Street Crimes Unit known as the 'Northwest Raiders.'

Costanzo was investigated for allegedly questioning a woman who is a key witness in the ongoing police corruption case. The alleged encounter took place while the woman was in BSO custody on an unrelated charge.

Agents from a Federal Bureau of Investigation public corruption task force conducted the investigation to determine whether Costanzo attempted to intimidate or otherwise unduly influence the witness about a kidnapping and corruption case that is pending against members of NW Raiders street crimes unit.

That corruption case involves a woman and her husband, whose identities the South Florida Times is not revealing, who were allegedly kidnapped by members of the NW Raiders on Aug. 24, 2011.

The husband was taken into custody after a traffic stop and his wife was later picked up from her doctor’s office in Lauderhill. Police threatened them with arrest if they did not arrange a drug deal with Junior Jerome and Dieudson Nore who were suspected to be drug dealers, according to sources and an arrest affidavit in the case.

After hours of intimidation, the couple eventually agreed and the deal was set up at the Red Roof Inn motel in Oakland Park, leading to the arrest of Jerome and Nore on drug delivery charges. The couple was released after the two men were taken into custody.

However, the motel’s surveillance video, which Jerome’s attorney Carter Hillstrom obtained, contradicted the accounts given in police reports. Authorities say the video footage showed the drugs may have been planted and some of the cash seized from them was never turned into evidence.

The charges against Jerome and Nore were dropped and the state attorney’s office and public corruption task force opened an investigation into the officers.

That investigation, among other things, contends that the man and his wife had been kidnapped and forced to participate in the drug operation with the NW Raiders. It also determined that some members of the NW Raiders had been robbing drug dealers of cash and drugs, and making arrests based on fabricated evidence, according to the arrest affidavits.

So far, the ongoing investigation by the task force has resulted in kidnapping, extortion, theft, making threats and false arrest charges against Fort Lauderdale detectives Brian Dodge and Billy Koepke.

They are awaiting trial.

Fort Lauderdale Sgt. Michael Florenco and Officer Matthew Moceri, who officials say were also involved in the arrests, have been suspended.

Meanwhile, on Jan. 23, the husband and wife who were kidnapped and are witnesses in the police corruption case, were pulled over by BSO deputies in an unrelated traffic stop. Costanzo and other members of a BSO Selective Enforcement Team arrived on the scene and a search was conducted of the couple’s car.

Costanzo is friends with Koepke and was also on the scene at scene at the Red Roof Inn when Dieudson and Nore were arrested, but say he was not involved in that drug operation. 

The husband was cited for driving with a suspended license and released at the scene. According to the probable cause affidavit, a prescription Zanax pill and powder from a Fastin diet pill were found in the wife’s purse. She was arrested on possession charges and taken to the Oakland Park district station for processing.

Even though Costanzo didn’t make the arrest, he arrived at the station where the woman was being detained in a holding cell and began questioning her about what took place at the Red Roof Inn and challenging whether she was kidnapped at all, several sources have confirmed.

Holding cells in most BSO facilities are kept under video surveillance and Costanzo’s encounter with the woman was captured on video, according to sources. The video also reportedly shows the woman with her hands cuffed behind her back for hours.

He is accused of videotaping the traffic stop and allegedly sent the footage to  Koepke.

Costanzo has participated in several high-profile operations that targeted so-called prescription drug mills and pain clinics. Known on the streets as “Zo,” he has been featured on the COPS program several times, distinguished by his tattooed arms.

BSO hired Costanzo 12 years ago and he earns $69,908 a year. He now works out of the Oakland Park district. He has played on his department’s softball team and received employee of the month honors several times during his career.

 

***Pictured above is BSO deputy Anthony Costanzo.